- When the Nobles family relocates to North Carolina, they will encounter inexplicable occurrences as they settle into a former plantation and learn the true history of its ancestral occupants.
- Chris, a husband and stepfather, moves his family to a dream home in North Carolina. Shortly after settling in, the house reveals its past as his children interact with a young girl and Chris experiences unsettling out-of-body experiences. Determined to unravel the mystery, he uncovers the dark history of the house and the connection it has to the family. As they delve deeper, their lives are forever changed by the supernatural forces that reside within its walls.
- In this spine-tingling tale, the Nobles family relocates from Georgia to their dream home in North Carolina, gifted to them by an enigmatic elderly woman. However, their idyllic new abode soon transforms into a haunting ground of explainable occurrences. The children encounter the ethereal presence of Tilley, a long-deceased girl, while Chris, the stepfather, experiences an unsettling series of out-of-body encounters. As the family delves into the property's past, they uncover the tragic history of Greenwreath Plantation, a former plantation steeped in the horrors of slavery. As the lines between reality and the supernatural blur, the Nobles must confront the terrifying secrets that lie within their new home and fight for their very survival.
The Property of Greenwreath Plantation follows the Foreman family as they build their plantation empire in North Carolina. John Foreman, the patriarch of the family, moves to Pitt County in 1780 and begins acquiring land. By the time he dies in 1818, the Foremans own 6,000 acres of land along the Tar River. John's son Ivey expands the family's holdings to more than 10,000 acres by 1830, making the Foremans one of the county's most prosperous families. John L. Foreman, the third generation planter, serves in the House of Commons and the state Senate before his untimely death. The plantation is passed down to his son, William Joseph Foreman, who serves as an officer in the Confederate Army. The house remains in the Foreman family until 1919.
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